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Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Free Awakening Essays: Kate Chopin :: Chopin Awakening Essays

The arouse  Kate Chopin       Kate Chopin was an American antecedent who lived during the nineteenth century, barely because of The Awakening, a novel which was considered opprobrious at the time, she has just recently been accepted into the canon of major American writers(Trosky 105). Through Kate Chopins main character of The Awakening, Edna Pontellier, she is able to portray her feelings and desires that were other suppressed by the ideals of American society at that time. Kate Chopin was born on February 8, 1851 in St. Louis, Missouri. She was brought up in a family that was a member of the tumid French- Creole community. During her childhood she possessed a love for reading. Her favorite types of books were fairy tales, poetry and novels. She secluded herself for almost 2 years, away from her family and rail in her attic, spending the majority of her time reading (Trosky 102). after her schooling, Chopin worn-out(a) her days as a belle in St. Louis high society. She was greatly admire for both her beauty and wit. She continued her readings, becoming more interested in contemporary works. In 1869, she traveled to New Orleans where she met Oscar Chopin, whom she married. Though married, Chopin remained moderately independent, practicing habits such as smoking and walking alone in the city, two things unheard of from women at that time.(Trosky 102) In 1883, Oscar Chopin died of swamp fever. By 1884, Kate moved with her six-spot children back to St. Louis. Around this time, Chopin began her writing career, writing in periodicals and publishing collections of defraud stories. She received good reviews and continued to write at an impressive rate. Her cheering was short lived though, following the publication of The Awakening. This work, which would eventually be recognized as her masterpiece and a seminal work in American feminist fiction, first proved her most notorious publication and her literary undoing.(Trosky 103) At the time, Chopins novel was considered scandalous and immoral, for it dealt largely with a womens sexuality. At the time The Awakening was written, a novel would be judged on its moral message as much as its artistic merits. After the negative response of critics, Chopin published a few more works, but nothing was well received. She received little recognition, which when given, described her as an author of southern local color stories (Trosky 103). Local color writing was a movement which tried to capture the feeling of a particular vicinity through descriptions of local speech and manners(The Age of Realism).

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